Post navigation

The Fiesta Gowns of San Antonio

I spent my first day in San Antonio putting the final touches on the Color Grid Quilts that were to be displayed at Gallery Nord. I was one of the featured artists for this conference, and eventually we will get to that. But first, The Witte.

The next day, I attended the Pre-Conference Fiber Study Tour. Jane Dunnewold, President of SDA, opened her amazing Art Cloth Studio space to all of the tour participants. I wrote about this visit in an earlier blog post.

After a great morning visiting Jane’s studio, we headed to the The Witte Musuem to see their exhibit of Fiesta gowns. But first we had a great lunch. BBQ, of course, with Elvis.

Prior to the conference, I had read an interesting article in the Surface Design Journal about these gowns and was very much looking forward to seeing them in person. The article looked at all aspects of the dresses–the glitter, the tradition, the politics. This year’s Witte exhibition of the gowns featured dresses from their collection that celebrated a patriotic or military court theme.

The article called “Catching the Light in San Antonio” was writen by Michaele Haynes who is a former curator of collections at the Witte. She has also written a book about the subject.

She was also our tour guide, which meant we got the inside scoop on these gowns–Haynes had spent a great deal of her professional life documenting these gowns and the economic and social controversy surrounding them. You see, not everyone gets a chance to wear one of these gowns–you’ve got to have old San Antonio money.

Here is the story. All of the quotes are from Haynes’s article.

“The royal robes were first worn in 1909 as part of San Antonio’s annual commemoration of the Battle of San Jacinto, the concluding battle in Texas’s 1836 revolution against Mexico. The celebration, now known as Fiesta, began in 1891 with a parade and rapidly grew into a citywide festival, currently featuring over 100 events.”

There are dozens of “royal courts” whose members wear OVER THE TOP glitzed out gowns. “These gowns are the highlight of an annual spring pageant in which a young woman, surrounded by her court, is crowned Queen of the Order of the Alamo, a private male social organization.” The goal of these gowns–as the title of the article indicates–is to Catch the Light.

Okay- we all know Texans like big things and this is no exception. Basically, this was giant debutant ball done Texas style.

Each year there is a different court theme. Some past themes include Court of Flowers (1909) and Court of Birds (1920). But as time went on, the names got bigger and glitzer–just like the dresses. The names of the royal participants grew too. In 1916 there was a Duchess of Aurora of Fairies. In 2008, there was a Duchess of Transcendent Renaissance Frescoes from the Court of Palatial Magnificence!

Oh the craziness. The royal titles and the designs are created by the mistress of the robes, who is usually the wife of a member of the Order of the Alamo. She works with a court artist. “Five to seven official dressmakers work with the mistress of the robes, and each of them may hire up to ten seamstresses to do much of the sewing and handwork.”

The combined weight of a modern dress and train may be 60 to 100 pounds. One of the most dramatic and challenging moments of the presentation of the court is when the gown wearer must take a complete–all the way to the floor–bow. Here Michael Haynes demonstrates the bow. Can you imagine doing that with an extra 100 pounds attached to your body? I might be able to get down, but getting back up would sure be dicey.

The average cost of a gown is between $35,000 to $50,000.

Lets do the math here–it takes about three years to get the robes from idea to reality. There is one queen, one princess, and 24 duchesses. That’s 26 gowns at $42,500 a pop or approximately 1.105,000 million dollars. Now there are six dressmakers each with ten seamstresses for a total of 66 individuals working for maybe a year-and-a-half making about $16, 750 for their time. I know these are rough estimates, but you get idea. Each gown costs a lot of money, but no where near what it should. Still who can say no to all that shiny stuff? Traditon trumps any economic or social concerns these families might have about participating.

Interestingly, whenever I brought up the topic of these gowns with a locale, their most common response was to roll their eyes and/or throw their hands up in the air in disgust. While no one is stopping this spectacle, it was apparent that there was no consensus on the matter between the royalty of San Antonio and the regular old denizen. Maybe there is such a thing as too big, at least for some Texans.

Browse

7 thoughts on “The Fiesta Gowns of San Antonio”

Hi Maria,
Jerry and I were married and lived in our first home in San Antonio in 1963 when the Villita and the river walk were starting. NO children yet, I spent my time taking art and tennis lessons and trying to grow a cactus on our patio–no enough sun. The food there was fabulous and we learned to love Tex-Mex and all the crafts and jewelry that nearby Mexico offered. So glad you got to be there for your conference. S.C. Carole